The Corrections

For the British indie rock band, see The Corrections (band).
The Corrections

First edition cover
Author Jonathan Franzen
Cover artist Jacket design by Lynn Buckley.
Photograph: Willinger / FPG
Country United States
Language English
Publisher Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Publication date
September 1, 2001
Media type Print (hardback & paperback)
Pages 568 pp (first edition, hc)
ISBN 0-374-12998-3 (first)
OCLC 46858728
813/.54 21
LC Class PS3556.R352 C67 2001

The Corrections is a 2001 novel by American author Jonathan Franzen. It revolves around the troubles of an elderly Midwestern couple and their three adult children, tracing their lives from the mid-twentieth century to "one last Christmas" together near the turn of the millennium. The novel was awarded the National Book Award in 2001[1] and the James Tait Black Memorial Prize in 2002.

The Corrections was published to widespread acclaim from literary critics. The sense of anxiety and apprehension found in its characters has been compared with those of Americans following the September 11 terrorist attacks, despite the novel's publishing having preceded that event by ten days. As a result, many have interpreted the novel as having prescient insight into the mood of post-9/11 American life, and numerous publications have ranked it with the best works of contemporary fiction.[2][3]

Plot summary

The Corrections explores the lives of the Lamberts, a traditional and somewhat repressed Midwestern family whose children have fled to the East Coast to start new lives free from the influence of their parents. Chronologically, the novel shifts back and forth throughout the late twentieth century, depicting in detail the personal growth and mistakes of each family member.

Alfred Lambert is a railroad engineer and the stern patriarch of the Lambert family, based in the fictional Midwestern suburb of St. Jude. After his children grow up and move to the East Coast, Alfred retires, but soon begins to suffer from Parkinson's disease, causing his ordered, strict personality to fracture. Alfred's loyal wife Enid has long suffered from his authoritarian behavior, and her life is made more difficult by Alfred's worsening dementia. She is also concerned by their three children's questionable life choices, as well as their abandonment of mid-western Protestant values.

Gary, the eldest Lambert son, is a successful but alcoholic banker in Philadelphia. His family suspects he is depressed, although he tries to deny (mostly to himself) the existence of any mental illness. Chip, the middle child, is a Marxist academic whose disastrous affair with a student loses him a tenure-track job and lands him in the employment of a Lithuanian crime boss defrauding American investors. Denise, the youngest of the family, is a successful chef in Philadelphia but loses her job after interlocking romances with both her boss and his wife.

As the economic boom of the late nineties goes into full swing, the family's problems become impossible to ignore. The separate plot-lines converge on Christmas morning back in St. Jude, when Enid and her children are forced to confront Alfred's accelerating physical and mental decline.

Themes

The title of The Corrections refers most literally to the decline of the technology-driven economic boom of the late nineties. Franzen makes this clear at the beginning of the book's final chapter, also titled "The Corrections":

The Correction, when it finally came, was not an overnight bursting of a bubble but a much more gentle let-down, a year-long leakage of value from key financial markets...

(On a more abstract level, the title is an homage to William Gaddis' The Recognitions.[4])

This economic correction parallels the simultaneous "corrections" that Franzen's characters make to their own lives in the novel's final pages. Franzen has said that "the most important corrections of the book are the sudden impingements of truth or reality on characters who are expending ever larger sums of energy on self-deception or denial."[5] Enid becomes more flexible in her worldview and less submissive to her husband's authority, and Chip begins a more mature relationship with a woman, simultaneously reconciling with his father. Gary, the only central character who fails to learn from his mistakes and grow during the course of the novel, loses a lot of money as technology stocks begin to decline.

Another key theme in the book is America's transition from an industrial economy to an economy based largely on the financial, high-tech and service sectors. Alfred, a railroad engineer with a pension and a deep loyalty to his company, embodies the old economic order of mid-twentieth century America. His children, a chef, an investment banker, and a professor/internet entrepreneur, embody the new economic order at the turn of the millennium. Franzen depicts this economic transition most concretely in his descriptions of Denise's workplace, an abandoned Philadelphia coal plant converted into a trendy, expensive restaurant.

The narrative of Chip's involvement with Gitanas' attempt to bring the country of Lithuania to the market – "lithuania.com" on the internet – comments on unrestrained capitalism and the privileges and power of the wealthy while meaningful distinctions between private and public sectors disappear. "The main difference between America and Lithuania, as far as Chip could see, was that in America the wealthy few subdued the unwealthy many by means of mind-numbing and soul-killing entertainments and gadgetry and pharmaceuticals, whereas in Lithuania the powerful few subdued the unpowerful many by threatening violence."

The book addresses conflicts and issues within a family that arise from the presence of a progressive debilitating disease of an elder. As Alfred’s dementia and parkinsonism unfold mercilessly, they affect Enid and all three children eliciting different and over time changing reactions. Medical help and hype – the latter in the form of the investigatory method “Corecktall” – do not provide a solution. At the end, Alfred refuses to eat and dies, the ultimate “correction” of the problem.

Reception

The novel won the 2001 National Book Award for Fiction[1] and the 2002 James Tait Black Memorial Prize, was a finalist for the 2002 Pulitzer Prize,[6] was nominated for the 2001 National Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction and the 2002 PEN/Faulkner Award, and was shortlisted for the 2003 International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award. In 2005, The Corrections was included in TIME magazine's list of the 100 best English-language novels since 1923.[7] In 2006, Bret Easton Ellis declared the novel "one of the three great books of my generation."[8] In 2009, website The Millions polled 48 writers, critics, and editors, including Joshua Ferris, Sam Anderson, and Lorin Stein;[9] the panel voted The Corrections the best novel since 2000 "by a landslide".[10]

The novel was a selection of Oprah's Book Club in 2001. Franzen caused some controversy when he publicly expressed his ambivalence at his novel having been chosen by the club due to its inevitable association with the "schmaltzy" books selected in the past.[11] As a result, Winfrey rescinded her invitation to him to appear on The Oprah Winfrey Show.

Entertainment Weekly put The Corrections on its end-of-the-decade "best-of" list, saying, "Forget all the Oprah hoo-ha: Franzen's 2001 doorstop of a domestic drama teaches that, yes, you can go home again. But you might not want to."[12]

Criticism

With The Corrections, Franzen moved away from the postmodernism of his earlier novels and towards literary realism.[13] In a conversation with novelist Donald Antrim for BOMB Magazine, Franzen said of this stylistic change, "Simply to write a book that wasn't dressed up in a swashbuckling, Pynchon-sized megaplot was enormously difficult."[5] Critics pointed out many similarities between Franzen's childhood in St. Louis and the novel,[14] but the work is not an autobiography.[15] Franzen said in an interview that "the most important experience of my life ... is the experience of growing up in the Midwest with the particular parents I had. I feel as if they couldn’t fully speak for themselves, and I feel as if their experience—by which I mean their values, their experience of being alive, of being born at the beginning of the century and dying towards the end of it, that whole American experience they had—[is] part of me. One of my enterprises in the book is to memorialize that experience, to give it real life and form."[16] The novel also focuses on topics such as the multi-generational transmission of family dysfunction[17] and the waste inherent in today's consumer economy,[18] and each of the characters "embody the conflicting consciousnesses and the personal and social dramas of our era."[19] Influenced by Franzen's life, the novel in turn influenced it; during its writing, he said in 2002, he moved "away from an angry and frightened isolation toward an acceptance – even a celebration – of being a reader and a writer."[20]

In a Newsweek feature on American culture during the George W. Bush administration, Jennie Yabroff said that despite being released less than a year into Bush's term and before the September 11 attacks, The Corrections "anticipates almost eerily the major concerns of the next seven years."[11] According to Yabroff, a study of The Corrections demonstrates that much of the apprehension and disquiet that is seen as characteristic of the Bush era and post-9/11 America actually predated both. In this way, the novel is both characteristic of its time and prophetic of things to come; for Yabroff, even the controversy with Oprah, which saw Franzen branded an "elitist", was symptomatic of the subsequent course of American culture, with its increasingly prominent anti-elitist strain. She argues that The Corrections stands above later novels which focus on similar themes, because unlike its successors it addresses these themes without being "hamstrung by the 9/11 problem" which preoccupied Bush-era novels by writers such as Don DeLillo, Jay McInerney, and Jonathan Safran Foer.[11]

Film adaptation

In August 2001, producer Scott Rudin optioned the film rights to The Corrections for Paramount Pictures.[21] As of December 2012 the rights have not yet been turned into a finished film.[22]

In 2002, the film was said to be in pre-production, with Stephen Daldry attached to direct and dramatist David Hare working on the screenplay.[23] In October 2002, Franzen gave Entertainment Weekly a wish cast-list for the film, saying, "If they told me Gene Hackman was going to do Alfred, I would be delighted. If they told me they had cast Cate Blanchett as [Alfred's daughter] Denise, I would be jumping up and down, even though officially I really don't care what they do with the movie."[24]

In January 2005, Variety announced that, with Daldry presumably off the project, Robert Zemeckis was developing Hare's script "with an eye toward directing."[25] In August 2005, Variety confirmed that the director would definitely be helming The Corrections.[26] Around this time, it was rumored that the cast would include Judi Dench as the family matriarch Enid, along with Brad Pitt, Tim Robbins and Naomi Watts as her three children.[27] In January 2007, Variety wrote that Hare was still at work on the film's screenplay.[28]

In September, 2011, it was announced that Rudin and the screenwriter and director Noah Baumbach were preparing The Corrections as a "drama series project," to potentially co-star Anthony Hopkins and air on the cable channel HBO. Baumbach and Franzen collaborated on the screenplay, which Baumbach would direct. In 2011, it was announced that Chris Cooper and Dianne Wiest will star in the HBO adaptation. In November 2011, it was announced that Ewan McGregor has joined the cast.[29] In a March 7, 2012 interview, McGregor confirmed that work on the film was a "about a week" in and also noted that both Dianne Wiest and Maggie Gyllenhaal were among the cast members.[30] But on May 1, 2012, HBO decided not to pick up the pilot for a full series.[31]

Radio adaptation

In January 2015, the BBC broadcast a 15-part radio dramatisation of the work. The series of 15-minute episodes, adapted by Marcy Kahan and directed by Emma Harding, also starred Richard Schiff (The West Wing), Maggie Steed (The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus), Colin Stinton (Rush, The Bourne Ultimatum) and Julian Rhind-Tutt (Lucy, Rush, Notting Hill). The series was part of BBC Radio 4's 15 Minute Drama "classic and contemporary original drama and book dramatisations".

References

  1. 1 2 "National Book Awards – 2001". National Book Foundation. Retrieved 2012-03-27.
    (With acceptance speech by Franzen and essays by Mary Jo Bang, David Ulin, and Lee Taylor Gaffigan from the Awards 60-year anniversary blog.)
  2. The New Classics: Books
  3. All-TIME 100 Books
  4. Franzen, Jonathan (2002). "Mr. Difficult". The New Yorker.
  5. 1 2 Antrim, Donald. "Jonathan Franzen". BOMB Magazine. Fall 2001. Retrieved July 27, 2011.
  6. "Fiction". The Pulitzer Prizes. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
  7. "All Time 100 Novels". Time. October 16, 2005. Retrieved May 25, 2010.
  8. Birnbaum, Robert. "Bret Easton Ellis", The Morning News, January 19, 2006. Retrieved on October 28, 2008.
  9. "The Best Fiction of the Millennium (So Far): An Introduction", The Millions, By Editor, September 21, 2009 .
  10. "Best of the Millennium, Pros Versus Readers", The Millions, By C. Max Magee, September 25, 2009
  11. 1 2 3 Yabroff, Jennie (December 22, 2008). From "The Way We Were: Art and Culture In the Bush Era". Newsweek. Retrieved January 10, 2009.
  12. Geier, Thom; Jensen, Jeff; Jordan, Tina; Lyons, Margaret; Markovitz, Adam; Nashawaty, Chris; Pastorek, Whitney; Rice, Lynette; Rottenberg, Josh; Schwartz, Missy; Slezak, Michael; Snierson, Dan; Stack, Tim; Stroup, Kate; Tucker, Ken; Vary, Adam B.; Vozick-Levinson, Simon; Ward, Kate (December 11, 2009), "THE 100 Greatest MOVIES, TV SHOWS, ALBUMS, BOOKS, CHARACTERS, SCENES, EPISODES, SONGS, DRESSES, MUSIC VIDEOS, AND TRENDS THAT ENTERTAINED US OVER THE PAST 10 YEARS". Entertainment Weekly. (1079/1080):74-84
  13. Brooks, ''The Mourning After: Attending the wake of postmodernism, p. 201. Google Books. Retrieved January 21, 2012.
  14. Theo Schell-Lambert. "''Village Voice'' 9/5/06 article". Villagevoice.com. Retrieved January 21, 2012.
  15. "''American Popular Culture'' Magazine article". Americanpopularculture.com. Retrieved January 21, 2012.
  16. Laugier, Sandra. "Interview in ''Bomb'' Magazine issue 77". Bombsite.com. Retrieved January 21, 2012.
  17. Merkel, ''Hereditary Misery", p. 5. Google Books. Retrieved January 21, 2012.
  18. ginsbor, ''The Politics of Everyday Life'', p. 63. Google Books. Retrieved January 21, 2012.
  19. "''Bookpage'' interview". Bookpage.com. Retrieved January 21, 2012.
  20. Franzen, ''How to be Alone'', p. 3-6. Google Books. Retrieved January 21, 2012.
  21. Bing, Jonathan; Fleming, Michael (August 1, 2001). "'Corrections' connections for Rudin". Variety.
  22. The Corrections (2011) Retrieved on December 9, 2010.
  23. Susman, Gary. "Cast Away", Entertainment Weekly, January 27, 2005. Retrieved on January 25, 2007.
  24. Valby, Karen. "Correction Dept." Entertainment Weekly, October 25, 2002. Retrieved January 25, 2007.
  25. Fleming, Michael (January 27, 2005). "Zemeckis checks new draft of 'Corrections'". Variety. Retrieved January 25, 2007.
  26. Fleming, Michael. "Rudin books tyro novel", Variety, August 29, 2005. Retrieved on January 25, 2007.
  27. Watts & Pitt Undergo "Corrections" (February 4, 2005) – Dark Horizons
  28. Fleming, Michael. "Miramax, Rudin option rights to novel: Pair pact for Pessl novel 'Calamity'", Variety, January 10, 2007. Retrieved on November 1, 2007.
  29. Andreeva, Nellie. "Noah Baumbach’s & Scott Rudin’s ‘The Corrections’ Adaptation Nears Pilot Pickup At HBO, Anthony Hopkins Circling", Deadline.com, September 2, 2011. Retrieved on September 5, 2011.
  30. Tasha Robinson "Interview: Ewan McGregor"
  31. HBO Passes On The Pilot For The Corrections Adaptation

External links

Preceded by
In America
Susan Sontag
National Book Award for Fiction
2001
Succeeded by
Three Junes
Julia Glass
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